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OLEN

（Ὠλήν), a mythical personage, who is represented as the earliest Greek lyric poet, and the first author of sacred hymns in hexameter verse.
He is closely connected with the worship of Apollo, of whom, in one legend, he was made the prophet. His connection with Apollo is also marked by the statement of the Delphian poetess Boeo, who represents him as a Hyperborean, and one of the establishers of oracles; but the more common story made him a native of Lvcia.
In either case, his coming from the extreme part of the Pelasgian world to Delos intimates the distant origin of the Ionian worship of Apollo, to which, and not to the Dorian, Olen properly belongs. His name, according to Welcker (Europa und Kadmos, p. 35), signifies simply the flute-playe. Of the ancient hymns, which went under his name, Pausanias mentions those to Here, to Achaeia, and to Eileithyia; the last was in celebration of the birth of Apollo and Artemis. (Hdt. 4.35; Paus. 1.18.5, 2.13.3, 5.7.8, 9.27.2, 10.7.8; Callim. Hymn. in Dev. 304; Creuzer, Symbolik, vol. ii. pp. 116, 130, 136 ; Klansen, in Ersch and Gruber's Encyklupädie ; Fabric. Bibl. Graec. vol. i. p. 134.)

William Smith. A Dictionary of Greek and Roman biography and mythology. London. John Murray: printed by Spottiswoode and Co., New-Street Square and Parliament Street. In the article on Soranus, we find: "at this present time (1848)" and this date seems to reflect the dates of works cited. 1873 - probably the printing date.